up and

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Unknown. Possibly from get up and. Possibly a dialect use of up (verb).

Adverb[edit]

up and (not comparable)

  1. (colloquial) Abruptly; unexpectedly.
    Halfway through the performance he just up and left.
    • 1932, Erskine Caldwell, Tobacco Road, page 168:
      I knowed then why she up and went there, because Ada told me.
    • 1968, Jerry Jeff Walker (lyrics and music), “Mr. Bojangles”:
      The dog up and died, he up and died
      And after twenty years he still grieves
    • 1990, Archie Weller, “Johnny Blue”, in Going Home: Stories, page 41:
      When he saw me hand and face, he up and goes for the head's office before I can say 'struth' and, by the time I can get after him, it's too late.
    • 2001, Charles G. Roland, Long Night's Journey into Day: Prisoners of war in Hong Kong and Japan, 1941 ..., page 193:
      a friend of mine who, within ten days, said 'I've had enough of this' and he just up and died. It seemed he wished himself to die.

Usage notes[edit]

Sometimes, particularly in UK usage, up is conjugated as a verb (by analogy with the forms go and X, try and X etc.):

  • They upped and left.
  • She was always upping and disappearing.

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